Published: March 25, 2010
Semiconductor Research Corporation and University of North Texas Establish Center to Focus on Advanced Plasma Processes and Insulators Used in Semiconductor Manufacturing
RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, N.C. & DENTON, Texas - (BUSINESS WIRE) - Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC), the world's leading
university-research consortium for semiconductors and related
technologies, and the University of North Texas (UNT) today announced
the formation of a new research center focused on the fundamental
understanding of advanced plasma processes and insulators used in
manufacturing state-of-the-art semiconductor chips.
Jointly funded by SRC and UNT with an annual budget for at least three
years of approximately $850,000, the mission of the Center for
Electronic Material Processing and Integration (CEMPI) is to help ensure
semiconductor devices continue to increase in performance while growing
smaller in size. Plasma processing is used throughout every stage in the
manufacturing of semiconductor chips, including depositing, etching and
cleaning materials.
Collaborating as part of the center will be a team of 12 researchers
from UNT, the University of Maryland, the University of California at
Berkeley, Rensselaer Polytechnic University, Pennsylvania State
University, Columbia University, University of Texas at Arlington,
University of Michigan and Arizona State University. The center will be
led by Dr. Jeffry Kelber, a UNT professor of chemistry, and officially
begins operations on April 1.
"This center is composed of many of the world experts who can provide
the fundamental insights to keep ever thinner insulators on chips from
shorting out between the copper wires used on today's chips," said Dr.
Scott List, director of Interconnect and Packaging Sciences at SRC.
"Having all these researchers working together in the center will
leverage their combined experimental and modeling expertise and help
provide a much more coherent solution path to the semiconductor
industry."
"The University of North Texas has a rich history of research in the
surface and interface chemistry of semiconductor processing," said
Kelber. "As semiconductor devices continue to shrink in size and grow in
complexity, the control of these surfaces and interfaces over atomic
dimensions becomes crucial to further advances. Better plasma processes
will be a major step in achieving that goal. The emerging stature of UNT
as a research institution makes UNT an outstanding location for the
center, with the ability to achieve research synergies and add to the
scope of center research going forward."
Plasmas are gaseous media in which many of the electrons have been
removed from the gas atoms to generate a high density of charged
particles that are accelerated by applied voltages. The detailed
understanding of the physics and chemistry involved in the plasma
interactions are becoming increasingly complex and difficult to predict
without a fundamental understanding of plasma interactions with
electronic materials and development of state-of-the-art plasma models
with experimental validation. Such understandings provide both tool
manufacturers and chip makers insight into defining the optimal recipes
and tool designs to fabricate faster chips.
In addition, CEMPI focuses on the growth and reliability of the new
insulators used between the copper wires that enable the chips to be
faster and use less power. Even issues as complex as how the detailed
plasma processes can impact the insulators to change their speed and
reliability are being addressed at CEMPI.
Plans to build a clean room and nanofabrication facility at UNT are
currently under way, and these additions will extensively augment UNT's
existing materials characterization and analysis resources. Driven by
Dr. Vish Prasad, UNT's vice president for research and economic
development, the university is among an elite group of public
institutions nationwide that offer this unique complement of facilities
and high-powered instruments. Depending on future funding, the center
could also logically expand its research to additional advanced
semiconductor topics such as three-dimensional TSV etching, MEMs and
packaging.
About SRC
Celebrating 27 years of collaborative research for the semiconductor
industry, SRC defines industry needs, invests in and manages the
research that gives its members a competitive advantage in the dynamic
global marketplace. Awarded the National Medal of Technology, America's
highest recognition for contributions to technology, SRC expands the
industry knowledge base and attracts premier students to help innovate
and transfer semiconductor technology to the commercial industry. For
more information, visit www.src.org.
About UNT
Expert rankings in U.S. News & World Report put UNT among the
top national universities that are "leading the pack" in innovative
changes in academics, faculty, students, campus life, diversity and
facilities. UNT is one of Texas' largest universities, offering 97
bachelor's, 101 master's and 49 doctoral degree programs, many
nationally and internationally recognized. A student-centered public
research university, UNT is the flagship of the UNT System. Discover
the power of ideas.

The Francisco Group for SRC
Dan Francisco, 916-293-9030
dan@franciscogrp.com
or
University
of North Texas
Sarah Bahari, 940-565-4835
University
Relations, Communications and Marketing
Sarah.Bahari@unt.edu
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